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Amy Lueders, BLM Chief In Nevada, Wants Mustang Abuses Reported

AP    
First Posted: 12/26/11 12:13 PM ET Updated: 12/26/11 02:25 PM ET

RENO, Nev. (AP) — The head of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management in Nevada is appealing to agency employees to step up and blow the whistle on any abuse of mustangs.

Amy Lueders said that's the best way to stop horse protection advocates from undermining the agency's roundup policies with video footage of the mistreatment of the animals and making it harder for federal land managers to win the public's trust.

"Regardless of title, whether you are a contractor or law enforcement or public affairs, that's everyone's responsibility," she said in an interview with The Associated Press.

In the past year, BLM has been taken to task by its own internal auditors, independent reviews, a U.S. district judge and camera-toting horse advocates.

A BLM task force that reviewed a roundup near the Nevada-Utah line in July found some mustangs were whipped in the face, kicked in the head, dragged by a rope around the neck and repeatedly shocked with electrical prods.

Twice this year, BLM has issued reports or statements pledging reforms to ensure humane treatment only to have videos of new incidents of mistreatment surface within days.

In the most recent case, this month, Ginger Kathrens was pointing her camera at the wranglers who appeared to be repeatedly shocking several burros with an electric prod.

The practice, called "hot-shotting," is used to help move them into a pen or trailer and it was being employed the same day BLM chief Bob Abbey issued a report pledging more changes.

Among other things, the report said electrical prods should be used only as a last resort when human or animal safety is in jeopardy, and that they should never be used on a horse's head or genitals.

"I thought it was ironic that while Bob Abbey was announcing the reforms I was filming the hot-shotting of the burros," said Kathrens, an Emmy-award winning filmmaker who is the executive director of the Colorado-based Cloud Foundation, a nonprofit horse advocacy group.

Kathrens said she was about the length of two football fields away when, zooming in with her professional lenses, she captured the footage. The video showed the end points on the prods producing a shock when a wrangler lifted it into the air.

Most disturbing to Kathrens was that officials for the U.S. Agriculture Department and BLM were standing near the wranglers and witnessed the shocks but did nothing to interfere.

Kathrens said BLM officials told her privately they shared her concerns in that regard.

That's where Lueders said agency workers have to do a better job.

Lueders delivered that message to several dozen employees in a video teleconference involving all of Nevada's BLM offices last week, saying there's no excuse for turning the other way if they get wind of any inhumane treatment of animals.

Lueders said, however, that it may be easier said than done when it comes to persuading workers to step up in what is often a controversial, and emotionally charged, situation.

But she said she believes her message got through.

"I made it very clear that is my expectation," she said. "We have a lot of committed, passionate people here who care very much about the resource and the animals themselves. You can tell by that passion and professionalism that everyone takes it very seriously."

Lisa Ross, a public affairs specialist for the BLM in Winnemucca, said Lueders' words have been well received and will be taken seriously.

"It's a very important message to hear," Ross said. "It doesn't mean that everything was wrong and now we are making it right. It's just that it is important and everybody needs to be on the same page on this."

About 33,000 wild horses freely roam 10 Western states — about half in Nevada. Another 41,000 are kept in government-funded facilities, including one in Herriman, Utah, that came under fire as a result of more video footage taken by horse protection advocates last spring.

A BLM task force asked to investigate issued a report in September confirming "unacceptable" conditions at the overcrowded facility where horses were forced to stand in a 4- to 8-inch deep mixture of mud and manure. BLM has since moved those animals elsewhere.

It was videotape of a helicopter either nudging or getting extremely close to a mustang in August during a roundup in northeast Nevada near the Utah line that prompted U.S. District Judge Howard McKibben to give BLM a stern lecture.

McKibben granted a temporary restraining order requiring helicopters to keep their distance from the galloping mustangs.

Lueders said it is important to remain open to criticism.

"I think we all learn more from each gather," she said. "Each gather gives us another opportunity to improve what we do."

Kathrens is among those who believe BLM officials are sincere and is optimistic real reform may soon follow on the range.

But Anne Novak, executive director of Protect Mustangs, based in Berkeley, Calif., isn't so sure. She said there should be a moratorium on roundups until the agency proves they have mechanisms in place to guarantee safe and humane treatment of the horses.

"The BLM must take responsibility to train their contractors before turning wranglers loose with whips and cattle prods," she said.

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RENO, Nev. (AP) — The head of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management in Nevada is appealing to agency employees to step up and blow the whistle on any abuse of mustangs. Amy Lueders said ...
RENO, Nev. (AP) — The head of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management in Nevada is appealing to agency employees to step up and blow the whistle on any abuse of mustangs. Amy Lueders said ...
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10:44 PM on 02/19/2012
Supporters of the mustangs, please help me ask the BLM to follow the same laws we do in regards to humane treatment of horses and burros. Sign and share my petition: http://www.change.org/petitions/the-president-of-the-united-states-the-blm-is-not-exempt-from-humane-treatment-of-mustangs
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Moose Luck 99
GEOENGINEERINGWATCH DOT ORG
03:38 PM on 12/27/2011
#4 - USDA caught running animal mass murder programs to kill birds and mammals
To the shock of many, the USDA was exposed this year for operating mass-murder programs that target animals such as birds, foxes, wild pigs and other creatures. This is primarily accomplished with mass poisoning chemicals that also end up killing other animals such as Bald Eagles.

Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/034501_conspiracy_theories_facts_2011.html#ixzz1hlluMFjY
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Neil20
10:12 AM on 12/27/2011
I agree 100% with Anne Novak. The BLM officials for one thing are just great big bunch of liars. They are hand- in- glove with ranchers and farmers who seek more land for their cattle. What is 33,000 wild horses in the ten states? The BLM officials are simply playing into the hands of the ranchers and the farmers. The horses should be left alone. Even if the number of horses double within a few years still they will not over-populate the 10 states. Leave the horses alone for God's sake. I hope more sense prevails in these officials.
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07:34 AM on 12/27/2011
Using a "hotshot" has been a common practice for many years for working with cattle and horses. It would not occur to most cowboys that this is "abuse". I'm guessing a lot of the commenters here know nothing about the lifestyle or culture they have an opinion about.
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olitenup
10:37 AM on 12/27/2011
I was raised on a horse farm and ran some cattle. We tried the "hot shot" one time and saw how ugly and painful it was and never used it again.

It is abusive, period. If you would not use it on your family and friends, it has no place in a barn either.
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10:13 AM on 12/28/2011
How ugly and painful was it? Please describe it in detail. I've been shocked with a hotshot and I don't remember it as ugly. What about electric fences?
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SpeakupNation
Pray for the dead and fight like hell for the livi
09:53 AM on 12/28/2011
It has not been a common practice for all of those working with cattle and horses. I spent a lot of time as a kid on a working ranch in western Colorado where this practice was considered as just plain stupid.
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cam1002
The People's Budget - It WILL Work
09:56 PM on 12/26/2011
Having been a Northern Nevada resident for over 30 years, I am with Anne Novak on this one.
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RoughCollie
Destination: A new way of seeing things.
09:24 PM on 12/26/2011
Lets ask a few basic questions here. First of all who is hiring these abusive "wranglers" ? Is this person still employed? If so, WHY? What kind of qualifications do these idiot cowboys have to begin with?

There is so much information out there on natural horsemanship, why doesn't the BLM consult with some of the horse world's favorite heroes like Buck Brannaman, Monty Roberts and John Lyons to name a few? Controlling horses (like people) by abusing them is ignorant, outdated and unnecessary, there are far better methods as well as far better horsemen and horsewomen if you just look for them.
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olitenup
10:40 AM on 12/27/2011
Exactly. The BLM hires alleged "horsemen" that I wouldn't have around my horses or my kids. They are horribly heavy handed, and have utter disrespect for the horses they have been charged to protect.
07:43 PM on 12/26/2011
The article states that there are thirty three thousand horses on ten western states BLM land and therefore the land is overgrazed. How many acres are overgrazed? How did the BLM determine that the horses are to blame?? How many cattle are on those same acres??
Reduce the number of cattle to no more than thirty three thousand and then you can determine if the horses are causing the problem, otherwise it is just BLM propaganda, nothing more than to protect the cattlemen.
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RoughCollie
Destination: A new way of seeing things.
09:25 PM on 12/26/2011
Agreed..fanned!
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cam1002
The People's Budget - It WILL Work
09:57 PM on 12/26/2011
Absolutely.
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SpeakupNation
Pray for the dead and fight like hell for the livi
09:55 AM on 12/28/2011
Exactly. There are big money interests behind this.
07:40 PM on 12/26/2011
It seems the human species should have evolved beyond this by now. How can we hurt animals when we know they suffer the same pain we would suffer if we did these things to ourselves. Cruelty to animals should not be tolerated. I think if the punishment was the same pain for the person as what they caused an animal, we would finally catch on.
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Starling5
Not an Earthling...
10:19 PM on 12/26/2011
I agree. Like having these cruel bas-rards' test-icles tazed.
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GaelicWench
Be good - if not, be careful.
08:41 AM on 12/27/2011
There are indeed some who truly believe that animals do not feel pain. They experience no emotions either. Absolute stooopidity! People who believe this should not have contact with any animal.

And yes, I definitely agree that taking a cattle prod to the idiots who hurt the horses should, themselves, experience the same thing.

I've wrangled horses before; I was helping drive a herd of 50+ horses to winter pasture. It's fast-paced and very exhausting after 25 miles of mostly trotting. When part of the herd decided to take a little "detour," all I had to do was rein my mare ahead and widen out to bring 'em back in again. I didn't need a frikkin' cattle prod or whip.
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Cheyla
07:12 PM on 12/26/2011
If you see abuse and don't report it, then you are just are responsible as the person who did the abuse!
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olitenup
10:46 AM on 12/27/2011
Exactly and that is true no matter the specie being abused.
11:54 AM on 12/30/2011
the problem is if you wait until the abuse is over, it's too late. The BLM will just say the employee needs more training, blah blah blah.

Here is the problem ... "Most disturbing to Kathrens was that officials for the U.S. Agriculture Department and BLM were standing near the wranglers and witnessed the shocks but did nothing to interfere."

Why wait until after the episode is over? If you have the authority just stop it the abuse right then and there.

Time and time again the BLM defers roundup tactics and decision making to the contractor. To me that is simply an unacceptable way to do business. If you hire them, you can also fire them.
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realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
06:51 PM on 12/26/2011
Seeing as how FoMoCo builds a car named for these horses, maybe it's an issue that could partly be resolved by writing TO Ford, and requesting some kind of financial support, possibly financed at least partly through the sale of such vehicles, as well as related apparel. This is America, we could have Adopt-A-'Stang, if we wanted. Maybe part of the revenue could go to subsidize better training for any/all horse wranglers assigned to such duties. Ultimately, a wild horse, a mustang, IS a wild animal, and is most interested in being as far away from humans as their legs can carry them. They don't want to be handled, 'broken', etc. They just want to run. And, run. And, if humans can spare it, maybe eat something?   I'm pro-freedom for mustangs. Why are they being herded around, to begin with?
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cam1002
The People's Budget - It WILL Work
09:58 PM on 12/26/2011
In Nevada, so that the Cattlemen can have more cheap grazing land.
06:46 PM on 12/26/2011
Amy Lueders has it right...whistle blowing on abuse is the job of every public employee including BLM.
06:37 PM on 12/26/2011
Abuse of innocent animals can never be tolerated. We pay taxes to protect these beautiful animals not to abuse them. BLM must be held accountable!!!!!
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Zephyra
05:51 PM on 12/26/2011
The problem with reporting abuse versus managing to avoid abuse is that horses die. BLM's list of serious infractions is long indeed. Never mind the horror of 29 Palms...
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Parkite
Still haven't found what I'm looking for
12:15 PM on 12/27/2011
Huh? Horses die, how/why?